Tp. Weber et al., OPTIMAL DEPARTURE FAT LOADS AND STOPOVER SITE USE IN AVIAN MIGRATION - AN ANALYTICAL MODEL, Proceedings - Royal Society. Biological Sciences, 258(1351), 1994, pp. 29-34
We develop an analytical model which determines optimal departure fat
loads and stopover site use for time-minimizing bird migration with an
y number of sites, to identify conditions under which birds carry more
fat than necessary to reach the next stopover site (overloads) or ski
p suitable stopover sites. The model is analysed with three sites: the
wintering ground, one stopover site (both of which are characterized
by their daily fattening rates), and the breeding ground. Overloads an
d skipping can occur if the sites decrease in quality in the direction
of migration. Departure fat loads are usually either at the level nec
essary to reach the stopover site or at the level for a non-stop fligh
t to the breeding ground; overloads are only deposited under rare circ
umstances. To model the effects of stochasticity in fat deposition we
include explicit functions for the dependence of fitness on arrival ti
me. If overloads are deposited, they are largest when the fitness func
tion is concave, lowest when convex, and intermediate when linear.